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But the BBC's Bilal Sarwary has seen them as he travels around the country, and he's started a collection of photos of everyday life. He's taken photos of school children in colorful outfits, a bird seller at the Kabul market and a farmer in Kundoz.

"What I’ve been trying to do is to show the world that Afghanistan is a country which has beauty and beautiful people. And that normal life goes on," he says. “Unfortunately with all the news about fighting and all the other problems, people start to forget that Afghanistan has this natural beauty.”

Some of Sarwary's pictures date as far back as 2003 — but he only recently started posting them to his Twitter account, now that Afghanistan has a 3G connection. While taking the pictures and sharing them might be easy, getting to the remote areas in Afghanistan is not.

“One of the biggest frustrations that I’ve had as an Afghan is that you really can’t travel to a lot of the provinces the same way as I was able to in the past,” Sarwary says. "It's because the security has dramatically deteriorated in those areas."

So, he sometimes captures beautiful mountains and rolling valleys in photos he takes from an airplane or a helicopter. Sarwary says his photos show the resilience of the Afghan people.

“When you go to a remote village in Afghanistan and a villager, who is stuck between the government, the Taliban, and the international forces comes out, he’s hospitable. He has not lost hope,” he adds.

This, Sarwary says, is what his project is about: capturing people, their lives, their hopes, and their resilience.